Commission approves 57‑unit Mission Street project amid sharp community opposition
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Summary
The Planning Commission approved a downtown project authorization and density‑bonus waivers for 1010 V Mission Street, a nine‑story building with 57 units (13 below‑market ownership units), after extensive public comment from community groups opposing market‑rate SROs and debate about outreach and cultural‑district alignment.
The Planning Commission approved a downtown project authorization for 1010 V Mission Street on Jan. 12 after more than an hour of staff presentations, sponsor remarks and public comment over a prior contentious hearing.
Rebecca Salgado of planning staff summarized the proposal as a nine‑story, approximately 85‑foot residential building replacing a surface parking lot; the project would offer 57 single‑room occupancy dwelling units and 13 below‑market‑rate ownership units. Salgado said the department received letters of opposition from local groups and had earlier presented an earlier iteration of the project to the commission.
John Kevlin, representing the project sponsor, emphasized that the proposal now proceeds under the state density bonus law and therefore seeks waivers for rear yard, exposure, wind, bulk and other planning‑code requirements. He told the commission the Housing Accountability Act protects projects obtaining density bonus waivers from disapproval unless there is a specific adverse impact on public health or safety supported by objective standards.
Community groups and residents gave mixed testimony. David Wu of Soma Pilipinas told the commission the group ‘‘continues to stand in opposition’’ to a project that he said would introduce market‑rate SROs into a block of predominantly 100% affordable housing and community organizations, and raised concerns about the project’s outreach and racial and social equity analysis. Several callers and residents urged approval, arguing the site is a vacant parking lot that will produce units and displace no one.
Commissioners questioned staff and the sponsor about outreach in the culturally designated Soma Pilipinas district, the CHESS report’s role, and how state density bonus rules interact with local transfer‑of‑development‑rights and floor‑area‑ratio calculations. Staff clarified that pre‑application meetings are not automatically required in the C3 district, though the department encourages outreach in cultural districts and recently published community‑engagement guidance.
After deliberation and proposed design conditions — including an encouragement to pursue undergrounding of a PG&E electrical room and a one‑step elevation into the Jesse Street ground‑floor unit — the commission voted 5‑2 to approve the project. Commissioners Ruiz and Imperial voted no. The record shows the commission included conditions and encouraged the sponsor to pursue additional community dialogue.
What remains: The planning authorization and density‑bonus waivers were approved with conditions; further building permits, affordable‑housing implementation and any future negotiations with community groups will follow through the planning department and implementation processes.
